News for young children
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Liberal government tables new First Nations drinking water legislation
7 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 23, 2026Gillingham, Santos get firsthand look at firefighter training program
4 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 15, 2026Winnipeg musician brings love for the bus to new song with message to province
4 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 15, 2026Meet Merlin the duck, a Mexico City streetside regular turned World Cup mascot
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 23, 2026A rare first edition of ‘Wuthering Heights’ complete with spelling mistakes is up for auction
2 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 16, 2026Downtown vintage shop offers up sweet fashions piping hot, fresh from the dryer
5 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 15, 2026Winnipeg retiree gives new life to repurposed fabrics with volunteer sewing network
9 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 15, 2026Ottawa introduces privacy bill covering children’s data, right to request deletion
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jul. 7, 2026Work progressing inside historic 121-year old library that will house City of Winnipeg archives
5 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 15, 2026‘We’re doing a lot’: Manitoba Lt.-Gov., proud of reconciliation work being done
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 13, 2026Upcoming TV production spotlights Winnipeg artisans
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 13, 2026Weighing profits against transforming ‘beautiful country’ of wind-turbine proposal south of Brandon
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 13, 2026Community gardens, urban farms more than hobby spaces, report authors say
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 13, 2026Halting social media harm requires national solution
5 minute read Saturday, Jun. 13, 2026THE federal Liberal government’s proposed legislation to ban or restrict social media access for children under 16 appears to be a sensible approach to one of the most difficult public policy challenges of the digital age.
Whether Canadians ultimately support a ban, limited restrictions or exemptions for platforms that can demonstrate adequate safeguards, one thing is becoming increasingly clear: if governments are going to regulate children’s access to social media, it makes far more sense to do it at the federal level than through a patchwork of provincial laws.
That’s particularly relevant in Manitoba, where the provincial government has been exploring its own options to restrict social media use among young people.
The intentions are understandable. Parents, educators, health-care professionals and policymakers are becoming increasingly alarmed about the effects social media is having on many children and teenagers.